Bosworth Toller's

Anglo-Saxon

Dictionary online

þeód

Dictionary links
Grammar
þeód, <b>I a.</b> add: 'a body of warriors, old and young, attached by personal service to the king ... the comitatus mentioned by Tacitus apparently resembled the þeód in all respects,' Chadwick's Origin of the English Nation, p. 311. Cf. pp. 156, 303, 3, 4. v. þeód-guma, -wita,
Wright's OE grammar
§137; §367;
and cf. þeóden; dryht, dryhten
Show examples
  • Hér is seghwylc eorl ... mandrihtne hold, þegnas syndon geþwǽre, þeód ealgearo, druncne dryhtguman B. 1230.
  • Wæs seó þeód tilu, 1250.
Similar entries
v. Angel-, Wealh-þeód.
Full form

Word-wheel

  • þeód,